@Article{Bencomo2019,
author="Bencomo, Nelly
and G{\"o}tz, Sebastian
and Song, Hui",
title="Models@run.time: a guided tour of the state of the art and research challenges",
journal="Software {\&} Systems Modeling",
year="2019",
month="Jan",
day="09",
abstract="More than a decade ago, the research topic models@run.time was coined. Since then, the research area has received increasing attention. Given the prolific results during these years, the current outcomes need to be sorted and classified. Furthermore, many gaps need to be categorized in order to further develop the research topic by experts of the research area but also newcomers. Accordingly, the paper discusses the principles and requirements of models@run.time and the state of the art of the research line. To make the discussion more concrete, a taxonomy is defined and used to compare the main approaches and research outcomes in the area during the last decade and including ancestor research initiatives. We identified and classified 275 papers on models@run.time, which allowed us to identify the underlying research gaps and to elaborate on the corresponding research challenges. Finally, we also facilitate sustainability of the survey over time by offering tool support to add, correct and visualize data.",
issn="1619-1374",
doi="10.1007/s10270-018-00712-x",
url="https://doi.org/10.1007/s10270-018-00712-x"
}

@inproceedings{mai_architecture_2019,
location = {Da Lat, Vietnam},
title = {An Architecture for a Distributed Lean Innovation Management System},
volume = {10(1)},
abstract = {The current trend for innovation management is going upward, the startup scene is more active than ever and new processes and trends to foster these innovations are developed constantly. Although we can see such an upwards trend, there is not as much development in software architectures supporting innovation management. In this work, a requirements analysis for such a software architecture was done based on various innovation processes. Finally, we propose this architecture as a system of systems together with our current reference implementation. The system is evaluated in various user studies, e.g., teaching, practical use at a university, and innovation competitions.},
eventtitle = {The 11th International Conference on Computer Research and Development ({ICCRD})},
booktitle = {International Journal of Innovation, Management and Technology ({IJIMT})},
author = {Mai, Carl and Grzelak, Dominik and Zia, Mariam and Lemme, Diana and Aßmann, Uwe},
date = {2019-01-26},
langid = {english}
}

@InProceedings{10.1007/978-3-030-29381-9_36,
author="K{"u}hn, Romina
and Korzetz, Mandy
and Schumann, Franz-Wilhelm
and B{"u}schel, Lukas
and Schlegel, Thomas",
editor="Lamas, David
and Loizides, Fernando
and Nacke, Lennart
and Petrie, Helen
and Winckler, Marco
and Zaphiris, Panayiotis",
title="Vote-for-It: Investigating Mobile Device-Based Interaction Techniques for Collocated Anonymous Voting and Rating",
booktitle="Human-Computer Interaction -- INTERACT 2019",
year="2019",
publisher="Springer International Publishing",
address="Cham",
pages="585--605",
abstract="During discussions in collocated work it is necessary to vote for results or to rate them to reach an agreement and continue working. To ensure impartiality and to avoid social embarrassment, the assessment should then be performed anonymously in so far as other groups members should not see directly how a person votes or rates. With a growing number of digital devices in collaboration, this requirement also concerns such kinds of equipment. Our approach of ensuring anonymity of individual votes and ratings submitted on personal mobile phones is to avoid shoulder surfing activities. For this purpose, we designed four device-based interactions that aim at being easy to use and eyes-free to perform to stay in touch with the environment and potential shoulder surfers. We conducted a user study to investigate these interaction techniques and observed seven groups with four participants each while testing the interactions. Participants evaluated usability and User Experience (UX) aspects as well as unobtrusiveness of the four device-based interactions. Furthermore, participants gave valuable user feedback and stated that our proposed interactions help to avoid shoulder surfing.",
isbn="978-3-030-29381-9"
}

In Proceedings of the Workshop Ocl4All: Modelling Systems with OCL co-located with the 10th International Conference on Model Driven Engineering Languages and Systems (MoDELS 2007), Nashville, Tennessee, October 2007. To appear.

In Proceedings of the 11th International Workshop on Aspect-Oriented Modeling (AOM@Models’07) co-located with the 10th International Conference on Model Driven Engineering Languages and Systems (MoDELS 2007), Nashville, Tennessee, October 2007. Available at: http://www.aspect-modeling.org/published_papers.html

In Proceedings of the Second Workshop on Aspect-Oriented Product Line Engineering (AOPLE'07) co-located with the International Conference on Generative Programming and Component Engineering (GPCE\\'07), Salzburg, Austria, October 2007.

In Proceedings of MoDeVVa 2007: integrating V&V in MDE co-located with the 10th International Conference on Model Driven Engineering Languages and Systems (MoDELS 2007), Nashville, Tennessee, October 2007.

2007 : Model-Level Integration of the OCL Standard Library Using a Pivot Model with Generics Support

In Proceedings of the Workshop Ocl4All: Modeling Systems with OCL co-located with the 10th International Conference on Model Driven Engineering Languages and Systems (MoDELS 2007), Nashville, Tennessee, October 2007. To appear.

@INPROCEEDINGS{PreCon_Architecture,
author = {Christin Groba and Sebastian Cech and Frank Rosenthal and Andreas
G{\"o}ssling},
title = {Architecture of a Predictive Maintenance Framework},
booktitle = {Sixth International Conference on Computer Information Systems and
Industrial Management Applications},
year = {2007},
publisher = {IEEE Computer Society},
abstract = {Predictive Maintenance is a promising maintenance strategy. However,
existing solutions are isolated from enterprise systems and limited
to specific applications. A predictive maintenance framework that
integrates the diversity of existing techniques for equipment failure
predictions and that incorporates data both from machine level and
the upper enterprise level is still missing. We envision the development
of a predictive maintenance framework that is characterized by a
high degree of automation and the possibility to use state-of-the-art
prediction methods. We attempt to create an open architecture that
enables third-party suppliers to integrate their specialized prediction
components into our framework. In this paper we analyze the requirements
and introduce the initial architecture associated with such a predictive
maintenance framework, which is being realized in a joint project
with SAP Research.},
owner = {C5084885},
timestamp = {2007.07.02}
}

In Proceedings of the Fujaba Days 2007 co-located with the 3rd International Workshop and Symposium on Applications of Graph Transformation with Industrial Relevance (AGTIVE 2007), Kassel, Germany, October 2007.

30.

James J. Hunt

Isabel Tonin

Michael Benkel

Mirko Seifert

Katja Siegemund

Nico Feiertag

2007 : Modeling architecturally neutral realtime systems

Proceedings of the 5th International Workshop on Java Technologies for Real-time and Embedded Systems, JTRES 2007, Institute of Computer Engineering, Vienna University of Technology, 26-28 September 2007, Vienna, Austria

In Proceedings of the Workshop on Advances in Quality of Service Management (AQuSerM'06) at EDOC 2006

11.

Florian Heidenreich

Henrik Lochmann

2006 : Using Graph-Rewriting for Model Weaving in the context of Aspect-Oriented Product Line Engineering

First Workshop on Aspect-Oriented Product Line Engineering (AOPLE 06) co-located with the International Conference on Generative Programming and Component Engineering (GPCE 06), Portland, Oregon, October 2006